Page 47 - index
P. 47

Domains of Freedom
Justice, citizenship and social change in South Africa)
T KEPE, M LEVIN & B VON LIERES (EDITORS)
Freedom has been enabled by apartheid’s end, but at the same time some of apartheid’s key institutions and social relations are reproduced under the guise of ‘democracy’. This collection of essays explores the dynamics of social change and the complex ways in which power is produced and reproduced. It seeks to understand the lengthy and often indirect ways in which new communities are imagined and new solidarities are built. It aims to read the present historically, critically and politically, and to offer insights into the ongoing, iterative and often messy struggles for freedom.
    978 1 77582 204 2 978 1 77582 222 6 2016
324 PAGES
ZAR R368.00 ZAR R368.00
CONTENTS
• Justice: Overview
• Chapter 1 Land, politics and policy
change in South Africa:
What questions for land redistribution policy and practice?
• Chapter 2 Law and political conflict in South African land
• reform
• Chapter 3 Cui Bono? A political-
economy assessment of 20 years of
South African freedom
• Chapter 4 South African housing
policy over two decades:
1994–2014
• Freedom: Overview
• Chapter 5 Freedom Park and
the Voortrekker Monument: Commemorative practices between reconciliation
and decolonisation
• Chapter 6 The paradox of trade union action in post-apartheid South Africa
ABOUT THE EDITORS
• Chapter 7 The politics of women and gender in the ANC:
Reflecting back on 20 years
• Chapter 8 The role of rights and litigation in assuring more equitable access to healthcare in South Africa
• Citizenship: Overview
• Chapter 9 The politics of citizenship
in South Africa
• Chapter 10 Fire in the vineyards:
Farm workers and agrarian change in
post-apartheid South Africa • Chapter 11 From ubuntu to
Grootboom: Vernacularising human rights through restorative and distributive justice in
• post-apartheid South Africa
• Chapter 12 Social protests and the
exercise of citizenship in South Africa • Chapter 13 Migration to South Africa
since 1994: Realities, policies and public attitudes
    Thembela Kepe is Associate Professor in the Department of Geography, and the Centre for Critical Development Studies at the University of Toronto, Canada. He is also a Visiting Professor in the Geography Department at Rhodes University.
Melissa Levin is an instructor in African Studies at the University of Toronto. She has taught the politics of regional integration at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University and African Literature at Khanya College.
Bettina von Lieres is a Lecturer in the Centre for Critical Development Studies at the University of Toronto, and Extraordinary Senior Researcher in Political Studies at the University of the Western Cape.
SUITABLE FOR
Academics and scholars in African Studies, Sociology, Political Science, Public Policy, Human Geography, International Relations, Comparative Politics, South African History, and Development Studies
 JUTA EDUCATION AND SOCIAL SCIENCES CATALOGUE | 2018/2019
  46
 



















































   45   46   47   48   49